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Today our phones can connect to our alarm clocks, our watches, and maybe even our coffee pots. Dan LeBoeuf, a designer who focuses on connected experiences across multiple devices, explains how we can use connectedness to improve our UX work.

It's amazing how many features and how much functionality we can now provide to our users. This week, author Nicholas Bowman shows us that it's time to consider not only what we can do, but what is helpful to do.

A usable site needs to be easy to learn, intuitive to use, and memorable. But it should also be simple! This week, author Jenny Reeves helps us deconstruct user interactions, and find the path to simplicity.

User stories are bite-size snippets that highlight the true goals of an application throughout the design process. This week, author Tom Brinton shows us how even a lightweight implementation of user stories benefits UI design process.

What if instead of designing systems to be touched and tapped, we avoided screens, embraced typical processes, and made apps that worked best when our phones are in our pockets? Author of The Best Interface is No Interface, Golden Krishna discusses one of the provocatively different UX methodologies from his new book.

Large sites with complex navigation ranging from Disney to the White House are using fat footers - but why? This week, UX Booth takes a look at fat footers: the good and the bad, the old and the new, and how they improve site UX.